JERUSALEM — Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas on Sunday issued a statement calling the Holocaust “the most heinous crime” against humanity in modern times and expressing sympathy with families of the victims.

The statement, on the eve of Israel’s observance of Holocaust Remembrance Day, was the first of its kind by a Palestinian leader and appeared to be part of an effort to reach out to Israelis after a reconciliation reached last week between Abbas’ Fatah movement and the militant Islamist group Hamas prompted Israel to suspend U.S.-brokered peace talks.

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu dismissed Abbas’ declarations, saying that they were meant to “placate international public opinion” after the Palestinian leader had made a pact with Hamas, a group that “denies the Holocaust while trying to create another Holocaust by destroying the state of Israel.”

Abbas’ statement on the Holocaust came a day after the Palestinian leader said that the planned unity government under his leadership would recognize Israel and renounce violence.

However, the Palestinian Central Council, a top decision-making body, said in a statement late Sunday that negotiations can only be extended if Israel agrees to a full freeze of settlement construction and commits to the 1967 territorial lines — before Israel’s capture of the West Bank, Gaza and East Jerusalem — as a starting point for border talks. Israel has rejected both.

The council, which convenes every few years to endorse important decisions, also said it “completely rejects” Israel’s demand to be recognized by the Palestinians as a Jewish state. Sunday’s statement came at the end of two days of meetings by the council.

On Sunday, Netanyahu made it clear that Abbas’ statements had not altered Israel’s fundamental position that it would not negotiate with a Palestinian government backed by a group it considers a terrorist organization.

“I will not negotiate with those who seek to exterminate my country,” Netanyahu said on CNN’s “State of the Union” program. He said Abbas was engaging in “damage control” and trying to “have it both ways” by lamenting the Holocaust even as he is accepting the backing of Hamas.

“President Abbas has to decide whether he wants a pact with Hamas or peace with Israel,” Netanyahu said on CBS’s “Face the Nation.”

Sunday’s statement by Abbas emerged from his meeting a week earlier with Marc Schneier, an American rabbi who heads a group that promotes Muslim-Jewish understanding. At the meeting, Schneier suggested that Abbas make a statement to mark the annual Holocaust commemoration.

Issued in English and Arabic by the official Palestinian news agency, WAFA, Abbas’s remarks were presented as a reply to a question from Rabbi Schneier.

“President Mahmoud Abbas said that what happened to the Jews in the Holocaust is the most heinous crime to have occurred against humanity in the modern era,” according to the English text. “He expressed his sympathy with the families of the victims and many other innocent people who were killed by the Nazis.”

Abbas asserted that “the Holocaust is a reflection of the concept of ethnic discrimination and racism which the Palestinians strongly reject and act against,” the statement said. “The Palestinian people, who suffer from injustice, oppression and (are) denied freedom and peace, are the first to demand to lift the injustice and racism that befell other peoples subjected to such crimes.

“We call on the Israeli government to seize the current opportunity to conclude a just and comprehensive peace in the region, based on the two states vision, Israel and Palestine living side by side in peace and security.”

The Holocaust is a contentious subject among Palestinians, many of whom view it as the root cause of their displacement and exile in the 1948 war that followed the creation of Israel. Attempts to deny or minimize the Holocaust are common among Palestinians and in the Arab world.

Some Israeli Cabinet ministers have denounced Abbas as a Holocaust denier, citing his doctoral thesis, published as a book in 1983, in which he questioned the accepted number of Jewish victims and asserted that the Zionist leadership collaborated with the Nazis to encourage immigration to what later would become Israel.

Abbas has since recanted, saying in interviews that he would not contest the figure of 6 million Jewish victims of the Nazis in World War II.

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